Abstract

The increasing availability of open geospatial data, such as building footprint vector data and LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) point clouds, has provided opportunities to generate large-scale 3D city models at low cost. However, using unclassified point clouds with building footprints to estimate building heights may yield erroneous results due to potential errors and anomalies in both datasets and their integration. Some of the points within footprints often reflect irrelevant objects other than roofs, leading to biases in height estimation, and few studies have developed systematic methods to filter them out. In this paper, a LiDAR point classification methodology is proposed that extracts only rooftop points for building height estimation. The LiDAR points are characterized by point, footprint, and neighborhood-based features and classified by the Random Forest (RF) algorithm into four classes – rooftop, wall, ground, and high outlier. The percentage of correctly classified points among 15,577 sample points in Columbus, Ohio, amounts to 96.5%. Conducting this classification separately for different building types (commercial, residential, skyscraper, and small constructions) does not significantly change the overall accuracy. The footprint-based features contribute most to predicting the classes correctly. Height validation results based on a sample of 498 buildings show that (1) using average or median heights with classified points provides the best estimates, minimizing the disparities between computed heights and ground truth and (2) the RF method yields outcomes much closer to ground truth than earlier classification approaches. Some outcomes are visualized in 3D format using Google Earth 3D Imagery and ArcScene.

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